October 1, 2007
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Feature
Prelude to a Police State in Iraq
Iraqi Security Forces are riddled with corruption, and if the US involvement continues, Baghdad could become the capital of a Shiite police state employing the classic methods of dirty war.
Tom Hayden
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Little Disturbances, Enormous Changes
Remembering Grace Paley and the impact she had on literature, activism and many generations of women and children.
Kathy Engel
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The March on Jena
Thousands of civil rights activists are heading to Louisiana this week to protest a case of gross injustice–and the system that supports racial inequality across America.
Mark Sorkin
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Democrats Sizzle in Iowa
It felt a bit like Election Day in Iowa this weekend, as Democratic candidates at Senator Tom Harkin’s Steak Fry served up appetizers of the campaign to come.
Ari Berman
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John Gofman’s Nuclear Courage
Remembering an eminent scientist who fought tirelessly to protect human health from the hazards of nuclear weapons and nuclear energy.
Joseph J. Mangano
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Why the Silence?
Leaders of the Jewish community who have resisted calls to voice opposition to the war can no longer justify their failure to speak out.
Arthur Waskow
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Kentucky at War
Opposition to the Iraq War has created some unlikely alliances in Kentucky, much to the chagrin of Senator Mitch McConnell.
Bob Moser
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Progressive Jews Organize
A new wave of grassroots Jewish activism is emerging around issues like housing, healthcare and education.
Peter Dreier and Daniel May
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Editorial
The Times They Are A-Changin’
Politics aside, a speeded-up primary season may be a unique opportunity to rethink our notions of time altogether.
Annabelle Gurwitch
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Restore Integrity to Federal Elections
The House must act now to create universal voting standards and restore confidence in our electoral system.
Lawrence Norden
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Fear of Restrooms
Now that we know there’s a vice squad deployed to find people looking to hook up for quickies in airport bathrooms, air travel has taken on a whole new dimension.
Barbara Ehrenreich
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Those Cheating Patriots
In an era of technology-driven sports, the question of what is and isn’t cheating can get pretty murky. But Bill Belichick and the New England Patriots were caught red-handed.
Dave Zirin
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Greece: The Fire This Time
In the wake of catastrophic fires, Greek voters face a moment of “disaster capitalism,” as key environmental and economic decisions determine how to rebuild.
Maria Margaronis
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The Housing Bubble Pops
To solve the subprime mortgage crisis, start with aid for vulnerable homeowners, smarter economic policies and a more competent Federal Reserve Board.
Dean Baker
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Failing Electoral College
As California Republicans seek to game the dysfunctional Electoral College, a campaign is rising to establish a national popular vote.
Rob Richie
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Beware the Lame Duck
Bush may be a discredited President, but he can still do a lot of damage in the last sixteen months of his presidency.
The Editors
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Column
The Mercenary Factor
Who elected Blackwater and other hired guns to rule the world? The banning of Blackwater in Iraq sheds more light on the checkbook imperialism fueling Bush’s state of perpetual war.
Robert Scheer
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The Presidential Pageant
Here they go again: Bigfoot media are crafting the narratives that will distort the candidates, the issues and the entire presidential campaign.
Eric Alterman
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Playing With Numbers
The Bush Administration’s Civil Rights Commission would like us to believe that affirmative action harms black students by placing them in situations where they can’t keep up.
Patricia J. Williams
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Books & the Arts
Art Matters
Michael Rakowitz talks about his art, the possibility of public space and the Iraq War.
Benjamin Tiven
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Little Disturbances, Enormous Changes
Remembering Grace Paley and the impact she had on literature, activism and many generations of women and children.
Kathy Engel
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Getting Away With Murder
The brutal murder of a bishop and its violent aftermath exemplify post-civil war Guatemala’s descent into chaos
Peter Canby
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Jazz As a Way of Life
The landscape riffs on what works where,
Scrub brush dirt, scrub brush dirt, bougainvillea
Pamplemousse-style on sandstone
Declining to absorbJordan Davis
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The Passenger
In a posthumously published memoir, Ryszard Kapuscinski looks back on his life as a pathbreaking literary journalist who covered the Third World during the cold war.
Andrew Rice
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Letters
Letters
A heated exchange of views on Lakshmi Chaudhry’s slam of Harry Potter and a more civilized exchange between Jonathan Schell and Peace Action’s Kevin Martin on nuclear proliferation.
Jonathan Schell and Our Readers